Abstract

The poor blood supply to solid tumours introduces many factors that affect the outcome of chemotherapy, one of which is the problem of drug delivery to poorly vascularized regions of tumours. Whereas poor drug penetration has been recognized as a contributing factor to the poor response of many solid tumours, the question of drug penetration through multicell layers has not been thoroughly addressed, largely because of restrictions imposed upon these studies by the requirement for either radiolabelled or naturally fluorescent compounds. The aim of this study is to describe modifications made to a recently published assay that broadens the scope for assessing drug penetration during the early stages of drug development and to characterize the ability of various drugs to penetrate multicell layers. DLD-1 human colon carcinoma cells were cultured on Transwell-COL plastic inserts placed into 24-well culture plates so that a top and bottom chamber were established, the two chambers being separated by a microporous membrane. Drugs were added to the top chamber at doses equivalent to peak plasma concentrations in vivo and the rate of appearance of drugs in the bottom chamber determined by high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC). Both 3-amino-1,2,4-benzotriazine 1,4-dioxide (tirapazamine) and 7-[4'-(2-nitroimidazol-1-yl)-butyl]-theophylline (NITP) rapidly penetrated DLD-1 multicell layers (50.9 +/- 12.1 microm thick) with t(1/2) values of 1.36 and 2.38 h respectively, whereas the rate of penetration of 5-aziridino-3-hydroxymethyl-1-methyl-2-[1H-indole-4,7-dione] prop-beta-en-alpha-ol (EO9) and doxorubicin through multicell layers was significantly slower (t(1/2) = 4.62 and 13.1 h respectively). Inclusion of dicoumarol increases the rate of EO9 penetration, whereas reducing the oxygen tension to 5% causes a reduction in tirapazamine penetration through multicell layers, suggesting that the extent of drug metabolism is one factor that determines the rate at which drugs penetrate multicell layers. The fact that EO9 does not readily penetrate a multicell layer, in conjunction with its rapid elimination in vivo (t(1/2) < 10 min), suggests that EO9 is unlikely to penetrate more than a few microm from a blood vessel within its pharmacokinetic lifespan. These results suggest that the failure of EO9 in the clinic is due to a combination of poor drug penetration and rapid elimination in vivo.

Highlights

  • Studies demonstrating that spheroids are more resistant than monolayers to E09 suggest that drug penetration barriers may exist (Bibby et al, 1993) and this study provides experimental evidence to support the hypothesis that the failure of E09 in the clinic is due to poor penetration into tumours, in conjunction with rapid elimination kinetics in vivo

  • As the rate of penetration into a tumour will depend upon the concentration of drug in the blood and the rate of elimination from the body, it may be possible to predict the extent of drug penetration into tumours based upon knowledge of the drug's pharmacokinetics in vivo and the rate of penetration through multicell layers in vitro

  • The results of this study demonstrate that penetration across multicell layers is a first-order process and the pharmacokinetic parameters generated in vitro t1,2' the time taken for half the initial drug concentration in the top chamber to cross into the lower chamber; Kp, penetration rate constant

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Summary

Objectives

The aim of this study is to describe modifications made to a recently published assay that broadens the scope for assessing drug penetration during the early stages of drug development and to characterize the ability of various drugs to penetrate multicell layers. The principal objective of this study is to describe and characterize a modified version of the assay published by Cowan et al (1996) and to illustrate the potential significance of this assay by evaluating the ability of selected bioreductive and standard anti-cancer drugs to penetrate multicell layers. The identification of the rate-limiting process that determines drug penetration will give useful information to guide future drug development, the principal objective of this paper is to determine not how currently available drugs get there but whether they do get to the target

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